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EXCLUSIVE: 'Feud' Star Alison Wright Finally Gets Her Turn to Shine

By Leigh Scheps‍ 10:30 AM PDT, April 13, 2017

FX

These days, The
Americans star Alison Wright hasn’t been able to get a good night’s rest. “I
am too excited most nights to sleep,” the English actress exclaims. “I have a
lot going on and I am pumped by it.”

Wright, who’s played ‘Poor’ Martha Hanson on the hit Cold
War espionage series for five seasons, is now making her Broadway debut at
Studio 54 in the play Sweat, which recently
won the Pulitzer Prize for drama.“It's something I've always longed for,”
Wright, 40, says of taking the stage during a phone interview with ET before an
evening performance. “I did a lot
of growing up in the theater. This was always a dream.”

Wright plays Jesse, a middle-class worker who faces a layoff
from her job on the line of a factory floor. The shakeup gets to Jesse and her
friends, who find themselves pitted against each other to stay afloat. Wright
says the play by two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage hits home. “I grew
up in the northeast of England. As a child, it was a time when all the coal
mines were closing,” she says. “Fathers, sons, grandfathers were all suddenly
out of work and the backbone of the towns and villages disappeared. It’s the
same story we’re telling, but Sweat
is specifically about Reading, Pennsylvania.”

Drunk, disheveled and with dark black circles under her eyes
is how Wright’s character appears onstage for much of the drama, which before
transferring to Broadway played at the Public Theater, where Lin-Manuel Miranda’sHamilton got its start. It takes
place in 2000 and 2008 and tells the stories of struggling blue-collar workers
who might not have voted in 2016’s presidential election, Wright believes. “I
had empathy for a great chunk of people that I had previously been pissed at,”
she explains. “Because I was partially blaming them for where we are today. But
after I read the play I didn't feel that way anymore.”

Joan Marcus

These days, quietly tip-toeing backstage in tap shoes is
Wright’s hidden talent. She grew up performing in musical theater before moving
to New York at 22 years old in 1998 to pursue her acting career by studying at
the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute and The Barrow Group. Wright got
her big break in 2013 -- at 37 -- being cast in The Americans and promoted to series regular for season two. Roles
on Amazon’s Sneaky Pete, Blue Bloods and in the 2016 movie The Accountant with Ben Affleck followed.
She’s now part of the ensemble cast of creator Ryan Murphy’s FX anthology
series Feud: Bette and Joan.

“It was an easy sell,” Wright recalls of getting offered the
part of Pauline Jameson. “I got a phone call and [Murphy] asked me to do this
show, which blew my mind in itself that he gave me the part.” By the time they
hung up, she had already packed her bags for L.A. Wright had already heard of the
show, starring Jessica Lange as Joan Crawford and Susan Sarandon as Bette Davis,
through the trades. It tells the backstory of how the feud between two of
Hollywood’s iconic leading ladies began on the set of 1962’s What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? “[Murphy’s]
a real champion of women, and he proves that with the characters he writes,”
she says of the series that highlights how hard it was for aging women to still
be desirable in Hollywood as they got older. Crawford and Davis were 58 and 54,
respectively, when What Ever Happened toBaby Jane? came out.

Wright’s character, Pauline, is director Robert Aldrich’s
(Alfred Molina) assistant. While she is based on Aldrich’s real secretary from the
time, it’s perhaps the only composite
character on the series. Pauline, who represents a lot of young women in Hollywood
during that time period, tries to get a screenplay she wrote seen by Crawford
in hopes of directing her in the film. But Crawford turns it down, saying she
has no interest in a female director. “People are talking to me already about
how much that episode affected them, whether they are writers, directors or producers.
I hear from people every day that it resonates with them so deeply because
it's still very much the same experience they're having today. So, I know the
story is really touching people.”

While fans of The
Americans still don’t know if there will be more of Martha on the show, looking
ahead, Wright says she’d love to be in a movie by British filmmaker Mike Leigh
(Happy-Go-Lucky, Another Year). But
for now she’s relishing in the success she’s had -- and hopes to continue -- in
her career by playing women vastly different from each other. “I don't know if I ever thought this would
happen, so I am grateful I am finally getting to work after a long
time of waiting in the wings for
my turn.”